The Southern Californian Major Dailies Failed Miserably in “Commemorating” the 10 Year Anniversary of the Iraq War

The LA Times and the U-T San Diego Continue the Deception of Ten Years With Their Failure to Discuss the War

Los Angeles Times March 20, 2003

Southern California is home to two major daily newspapers – each from the major cities in this part of the country: the Los Angeles Times and the U-T San Diego.

In a review of their coverage of the ten year anniversary of the US invasion of Iraq, I found them to be woefully inadequate in any discussion about “lessons learned” on the war, the invasion, or the run-up to the conflict. I especially searched to see whether they went further and exposed the falsehoods and lies that the Bush administration told the public to convince us to go to war.

Those of us who suffer the U-T would not be too surprised to learn that the Manchester daily would not get too involved with a critique of the Bush’s deceptions and misrepresentations. However, one would have thought the LA Times – once the bastion of liberalness on the West Coast – would have at least attempted to put together some kind of journalistic endeavor in examining all the ways that the American people were misled a decade ago.

But both papers failed utterly in educating their readers on examining the pablum fed American citizens that convinced us – as a nation – to send our fellow brothers and sisters to their deaths in a land that was not threatening us.

The U-T San Diego coverage of the ten year anniversary included a Sunday paper front page article that led to a two-page spread inside about “Scars Still Visible in U.S., Middle East” – which was about the effects of the war on veterans who served there and on the Iraqis in their country. Three days later, the commemorative piece was all about the money that flowed into San Diego because of the war(s).

The LA Times, on the other hand, ran a couple op-ed pieces on the lessons from the war, a cartoon, and a follow-up article looking at whether Iraq is now better than it was before the invasion and war.

Let’s look at both the papers’ coverage a little closer.

U-T San Diego

In its Special Report that began on the front page on the Sunday before the 10th anniversary, the paper has a large photo with Marines saluting the boots, guns and helmets of two of their fallen comrades from Camp Pendleton back in July 2004. The report then opens to a full two-page spread, with a banner headline of “Iraq: ‘It was like a one marathon, a 100-meter sprint at a time‘”.

The accompanying photos showed a Navy medic holding a traumatized Iraqi boy whose family had been caught in a cross-fire, and it showed a Marine a couple weeks after the invasion being surrounded and nearly kissed by over-joyed Iraqi men who were supposedly chanting “Long live Bush!”

What are the lessons learned?

“The Iraq War … had a profound impact on the U.S. military, adding heroic chapters to its history as well as blood-soaked lessons in counterinsurgency, tribalism and the rise of the improvised explosive device, … as Achilles heel to the superpower’s juggernaut of high-tech weaponry.”

Yet the text is all about the troubles and trials that US military men had to contend with during the first months of the war. Generals are quoted how they were able to move their heavy forces through the desert up to the gates of Baghdad in 3 weeks. The military’s biggest fears? Not the Iraqi army but the “stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction used to sell the war – chemical, biological and nuclear – that were never found.”

This was not followed by any analysis of how the Bushies lied, but about how the tempo of the fighting was relentless, about how the conflict intensified with time and over the years.

The article even quotes one-time gunnery sergeant now turned right-wing politician, Nick Popaditch (known by local progressives for physically harassing Bob Filner and his staff down at election central) in describing the relief he felt when Saddam Hussein’s statute was brought down by American tanks. Popaditch – on the widespread looting that followed, causing $12 Billion in damage – “It’s just Iraqis taking back what is theirs. We weren’t supposed to intervene.” This statement reflects then Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in his famous quote about how ‘freedom is messy’ in response to the looting.

The “Special Report” goes on somewhat of an historical wash of the “progress” of the war, for example, how “hard-core jihadists hopped up on amphetamines were dug in, prepared to become martyrs.” Terrorists hopped up on drugs is an echo from the Vietnam War era, where US soldiers faced scores of enemy “gooks hopped up on opium”.

It discusses how tribal leaders in Anbar province were losing control of the insurgency to a “al-Queda in Iraq organization” – which of course only reinforces the idea that Saddam and al-Queda were linked, without any explanation or solid analysis.

It goes on and recounts how generals were so pleased with the progress on how Iraqis came out and voted in “open, free elections”, and nothing about how so many Iraqis and Americans were killed and maimed needlessly. The tenor of the report is basically how tough it was for the Americans to fight through all those years, but it was all worth it because the Marines defeated the insurgents in Anbar, and how this experience led to more victories in other provinces, and then progress later in Afghanistan.

The article sums up, quoting a general: “The Iraq War ‘matured the [Marine] force in terms of our capability, outlook and education. Now the $64,000 question is – what’s the next war going to look like?”

This Sunday spread is followed by another article that same day about how change is slowly returning to Iraq – a divided country.

On Monday, March 18th, the U-T led off with another front page piece in their continuing series of “The Iraq War”, but this time all about the thousands of Iraqis who have migrated to San Diego County, and especially El Cajon. That was it. We do learn that there are 40-50,000 Iraqis living in El Cajon, and that 13,000 have migrated here since the war began.

When Tuesday, the 19th rolled around – the actual ten year anniversary date – the U-T had nothing, no front page piece, no photos, no editorial or op-ed piece.

The next day, Wednesday, there was a front page piece, entitled, “War Brought Billions to San Diego”, which described it all. We’re told that the Iraq war “quickly led to an explosion in San Diego County’s military contracts as billions of dollars were spent to support U.S. and coalition efforts.”

Money spent in our county on local companies for Iraq work “exceeded $20 billion between the start of the Iraq War and the end of 2011 ….” We learn that SAIC, “the county’s largest defense contractor, had nearly $3 billion in Pentabon contracts in 2008 alone”. One of the biggest local beneficiaries of Iraq War spending on contractors, it is explained, was Stu Segall who converted his Kearny Mesa property into a mock Iraqi village, and using locals as insurgents, his company Strategic Operations reportedly trained more than 700,000 troops since the beginning of the war. The article doesn’t ask the obvious question of why a civilian did this and not the US military itself.

Duncan Hunter, Sr, is dragged out of retirement for choice quotes on the war. “The goal was to take down a brutal dictator who was murdering his own people,” he stated, continuing the narrative that the reason we went to war was to topple a vicious authoritarian.

So, that’s it for the U-T’s observation into the ten years since the invasion. No editorial denouncing the Republican administration for deceiving the public – actually, I didn’t see any U-T editorial from a cabal of editors who are quick to daily denounce a liberal mayor. No reflection. No genuine musings on what happened. Simply we’re given recounts of how difficult it was for the American military, and how courageous it was going up against so many odds, and how much money our local, fellow citizens made from the war in contracts.

The Los Angeles Times

With big hopes that at least the LA Times, a once venerable liberal bastion, would lay bare the lies and misrepresentations handed us by the Bush administration, by Condy Rice, by Dick Cheney, by the entire gang, and we could breath a little sigh of relief for getting some truth, at last …. but these hopes were quickly dashed when I actually read what the paper offered in their retrospect.

On the Sunday before the tenth anniversary of March 19th, we are given an op-ed piece by one of their regular columnists, Doyle McManus, who asked “Iraq war: Lessons learned?”

McManus at least was asking questions that the U-T didn’t even get hint at, yet even he was using terms such as “blunder”, “exaggerations”, “premises proven false” in recounting that George W Bush and his top aids still to this day “maintain that the invasion was a good idea”.

McManus at least acknowledges that the “debate over who deserves blame – is still under way,” and outlines “three big things [that] went wrong”. He lists hubris – but we’re now over it, and “flawed intelligence” about Saddam’s WMDs caused “crushing professional failure” to CIA analysts, and thirdly, “the politicization of intelligence information”, citing the Bushies repeated exaggerations of all those reasons to go get Hussein.

Yet, still no suggestion that the public was intentionally lied to.

On the actual anniversary day, March 19th, the LA Times had nothing on its front page, although it went with a full page and half about the new pope. It had no editorial, but it did have another op-ed piece, this one by Max Boot, an irregular conservative columnist from the Council on Foreign Relations. And it also ran a cartoon about how every member of Congress who voted for the war should war a commemorative dunce hat.

But again, we are showered with words and phrases like “error”, “miscalculation”, “mistakes”, “we were wrong”, “misinformation”, that we were unprepared, we blundered, we didn’t know how to pick up the pieces of the destroyed Iraq nation, and even “near-miraculous turnaround” of the war thanks to Generals Petraeus and Odierno. But nothing on lies or intentional misrepresentation by the president, the vice-president and both their staffs.

This is woefully inadequate from a major daily – one of the major “liberal” newspapers in the country.

Letter writers who responded to the Max Boot piece were much more on prescient. One wrote and asked, “What if Boot had led off his piece with a reminder of the bogus assertion by the Bush administration that Hussein and Osama bin Laden were linked? What if Boot reminded us that many of the United Nations weapons inspectors declared before the U.S. invasion of Iraq that they doubted Iraq had a weapons program?”

Another writer – who took Boot to task for laying a bunch of “what if’s” in his argument, suggests that if Al Gore had won the election in 2000, there never would have been a Iraq war at all, “and all that blood and treasure – unpaid for, as it was – would never have been wasted.”

On March 20th, the front page of the LA Times had a large photo of the statute of Hussein in front of burning government buildings – a very impressive image. I thought, well, this will be the article, the mother of all articles on why and how we ended up in Iraq. The Times will redeem itself, I thought. Then I read the headline: “Legacy of war lives on in Iraq”. Oh no, not another one of these.

It turned out to be a good-sized piece, but only how focused on ‘much has changed since the invasion, but is it for the better?’ It goes on to quote a number of Iraqis and how they perceive the differences between now and before the war. It discusses in individual stories of the current conflict between the Shittes now in power and the Sunnis not in power.

No discussion on how the American people were deceived by their government. I threw the paper down in disgust.

That was it – the two major dailies in our part of the world failed miserably in recounting for us how we were lied to ten years ago. It was almost expected that the U-T would glorify the war, talk up the tribulations of our very own soldiers and marines and tell us how much we benefited in dollars because of the war.

But the LA Times? Why no grandiose editorial? It spread many more words on anticipating the new pope than it did in preparing us for any new lies or government sleighs of hand when it comes to war. It’s retrospective focused on the current scene in Iraq, not on the decade-old series of lies and the grand design of deceit planned out by the Bush administration. Nothing in either paper on how the American people were manipulated with false claims to spill the blood of our children and the guts of so many Iraqis.

These papers’ coverage of this historic marker is unconscionable. At the very least, both the LA Times and the U-T San Diego because of their absolute lack of coverage of the real reasons we went to war, carry on the white-wash and cover-up of this horrible era of our time, called the most disastrous foreign policy “blunder” of American modern history.

Not a trace or hint of the idea that maybe we should hold those who lied to us responsible for so much waste of lives and treasure. How can we hold leaders accountable if they simply made “errors” or “miscalculations” or held premises “proven false”?

The corporate media – which, of course, both the LA Times and the U-T are part of – made us a monumental dis-service when it failed to adequately hold the needed discussions in the run-up to the war. And now, ten years after, they continue the lies and deceptions by not discussing them.

We need more from our “fourth estate” – and now we must demand more. No wonder the blog world exploded after the failure of the media to inform us on the real reasons Bush and Company wanted to go to war. And they can’t figure out why people look elsewhere for the truth. But search we must.

Related

Apparently, neither did the venerable Washington Post live up to its role in doing any retrospective of the war on its 10th anniversary, not at least by March 20.

See this from HuffPo:
“In the months leading up to the Iraq War, The Washington Post ran 27 editorials in favor of invasion, according to a count by veteran PBS journalist Bill Moyers. This week, around the 10-year anniversary of the war, it has yet to print any editorials or columns on the subject.

Media outlets have been publishing their Iraq War anniversary coverage on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, since Americans learned that the U.S. invaded Iraq the night of March 19. The New York Times, for example, centered its coverage on Wednesday, with several op-eds on Iraq and an editorial looking back.

But so far, The Washington Post editorial page hasn’t run a single column or editorial addressing the war. In an email to The Huffington Post, Fred Hiatt, the Washington Post’s editorial page editor, said there will be “a couple of pieces coming this week.”

In 2003, the Washington Post editorial board — like many others in the media at the time — supported the invasion of Iraq and viewed the war as inevitable. ”

Keep in Touch!

Welcome to the OB Rag – Ocean Beach & Beyond

The OB Rag has been initiated to ply the Ocean Beach community and the San Diego scene with news and commentary from a distinctively progressive and grassroots perspective, and to provide a forum for those views. Others with similar views are invited to contribute and participate. More about us...

Support the OB Rag! Purchase old copies - 20% off Help keep the OB Rag online by donating to buy 30-35 year old issues of the original OB Rag, Ocean Beach's infamous and iconic counterculture, underground newspaper; limited numbers are available for purchase!